Skip to content

French Open announces increase in prize money

Rafael Nadal of Spain celebrates victory with the trophy following the mens singles final against Stan Wawrinka of Switzerland
Image: Rafael Nadal will be gunning for an 11th Roland Garros win

The French Open has announced an increase in prize money for this summer's tournament to £34m.

The singles champions of the year's second grand slam, which begins on May 27, will each take home 2.2m euros (approximately £1.9m), up £100,000 from last year.

In keeping with the recent trend, the biggest increases are for the early-round losers. The average rise across the three qualifying rounds is almost 20 per cent while players who are beaten in the first round will take home 40,000 euros (approximately £35,000), an increase of nearly 15 per cent.

Latvia's Jelena Ostapenko celebrates with her trophy after winning her final tennis match against Romania's Simona Halep at the 2017 French Open
Image: Latvia's Jelena Ostapenko won the women's title at Roland Garros last year

The Grand Slams are under pressure to ramp up prize money, with ATP player council president Novak Djokovic calling a private player meeting on the eve of the Australian Open to discuss the issue and Roger Federer voicing his belief that players deserve a greater slice of the profits.

The Australian Open's prize fund this year was £30m, while last year Wimbledon paid out £31.6m and the US Open £35.7m.

You can watch more ATP Masters 1000 action from the Miami Open when we continue our coverage on Sky Sports Arena on Friday at 3pm.

Also See:

Live ATP Masters Tennis

Keep up to date with the latest on sky.mnosports.com/tennis with news, previews, live blogs, reports and expert analysis. On the move? Head to our app for mobile devices and iPad, or follow our Twitter account @SkySportsTennis to join in the conversation.

Tennis updates straight to your phone
Tennis updates straight to your phone

How to receive all the latest tennis news straight to your mobile

Around Sky